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Coordinates | 33.8°′″N73.45°′″N |
---|---|
Honorific-prefix | Councillor |
Name | Robert Doyle |
Nationality | Australian |
Order | 103rd Lord Mayor of Melbourne |
Term start | 1 December 2008 |
Deputy | Susan Riley (2008-Present) |
Predecessor | John So |
Successor | Incumbent |
Order2 | Victoria Liberal Leader / Leader of the Opposition |
Term start2 | 2002 |
Term end2 | 2006 |
Deputy2 | Phil Honeywood (2002-2006) |
Predecessor2 | Denis Napthine |
Successor2 | Ted Baillieu |
Birth date | May 20, 1953 |
Birth place | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Birthname | Robert Keith Bennett Doyle |
Party | Liberal Party of Australia |
The Kennett government suffered an unexpected defeat at the 1999 election, and Kennett himself resigned soon afterwards. Kennett's deputy and Health Minister, Denis Napthine, became leader, and Doyle took Napthine's place, becoming the opposition's health spokesman.
He lost the 2002 election by a large margin; the result was in fact the Liberal Party's worst-ever Victorian defeat. The party lost control of the Legislative Council for only the second time in Victorian parliamentary history, and retained only 17 of the 88 lower house seats. Also, the campaign suffered a large blow when the party's Treasurer, Robert Dean, was deemed ineligible to stand because he was not on the electoral roll.
For some time after the 2002 defeat, Doyle remained Opposition Leader, partly through the sheer shortage of potential alternative candidates for the job. However, following the decisions of Shadow Minister Victor Perton and Deputy Leader Phil Honeywood to resign, and the further resignation of Doyle's Chief of Staff Ron Wilson and his Director of Communications Rob Clancy, debate as to Doyle's future was re-ignited. Even many of Doyle's key supporters - including Upper House MPs Andrea Coote and Philip Davis, and Michael Kroger and Helen Kroger - eventually recognised that Doyle's leadership was unlikely to attract sufficient electoral support. It was also reported that Doyle's personal approval rating had dropped to 15 per cent. On 4 May 2006, Doyle announced his resignation as Opposition Leader, stating that "I have given my best - it was not enough" and that the move would give the party the "best chance of electoral success". Ted Baillieu succeeded Doyle in the post.
He officially ended his term as a Member of Parliament for the District of Malvern on 25 November 2006. On that day, the Liberals under Baillieu were again severely defeated; and as a result, Doyle publicly criticised several prominent party figures.
On 21 June 2007 the state government announced that it would appoint Doyle as the new chairman of Melbourne Health, the group that operates the Royal Melbourne Hospital.
On 30 November 2008, Doyle was elected Lord Mayor of Melbourne defeating then-Councillor Catherine Ng in a tightly contested election. Doyle also defeated former Melbourne Deputy Lord Mayor and Spotless heir-apparent, Peter McMullin and So's deputy between 2004 and 2008, Gary Singer. Doyle's great-great-grandfather, Robert Bennett, previously served as Lord Mayor of Melbourne (then known as simply Mayor) from 1861 to 1862.
In September 2010, when asked on radio about a move by suburban councils to ban smoking in some outdoor areas due to the risks of passive smoking, he said "I don't know of a case of cancer that has been caused by passive smoking."
The Chinese Consul-General in Melbourne requested a meeting with the Lord Mayor to discuss the matter. Despite the protests from the Chinese Government, Doyle refused to intervene to stop the screening. Subsequently, reports emerged that China would consider terminating the sister-city relationship between Melbourne and Tianjin, one of China's four municipal-level cities and the fifth most populous city in China.
Defying the Chinese Government's threat, Doyle lodged a complaint to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, prompting the Department to warn the Chinese Embassy to conduct themselves appropriately.
Category:1953 births Category:Living people Category:Mayors and Lord Mayors of Melbourne Category:Politicians from Melbourne Category:Members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly Category:Victoria (Australia) Liberal politicians Category:Monash University alumni Category:Australian schoolteachers
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